My latest at Forbes: The biggest innovation challenge facing many large companies is not “thinking big” but rather thinking too much. They are overwhelmed with more ideas than they can sort out, much less pursue. Here is a three-point plan for setting up a purposeful, systematic innovation process that explicitly deals with the challenge of too many “good” ideas.

In my latest column at Forbes, I lay out six technological megatrends that will transform every information-intensive industry over the next five to ten years.

These industries are up for “reimagination,” to use a term popularized by Mary Meeker, the Kleiner Perkins venture capitalist. That’s because, as the following figure shows, the exponential progression of these technologies will create openings for new killer apps that overwhelm incremental business change. Huge market share and market value are being thrown up for grabs. By Meeker’s estimate, the market value of just the top 10 information-intensive industries is more than $36 trillion.

My latest at Forbes: Millions of iPhone-toting Apple fans are sure to queue up upon the Watch’s 2015 launch to buy it. For billions of other potential customers, however, the Watch’s close linkage and tethering to the iPhone could be a fundamental weakness.

Here’s a CNBC interview with me on how driverless cars will transform the economy.

CNBC’s the Edge explores the limitless potential of innovation—from how new products and ideas will shape our lives to the long-term investment opportunity that will bring investors high-yield returns.